Pros and Cons to UV Filters

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Reefer37

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Hey guys, so I know very little on UV Filters and was recommended to using one to help combat my cyano problem. I'm not too sure what they do other than it killing algae/bacteria that passes through it.

Are there pros and cons to them?

Will I have to feed more to keep nutrient up or anything like that?

I'd love to hear from people who have used them or uses them regularly.
 

JGT

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Hey guys, so I know very little on UV Filters and was recommended to using one to help combat my cyano problem. I'm not too sure what they do other than it killing algae/bacteria that passes through it.

Are there pros and cons to them?

Will I have to feed more to keep nutrient up or anything like that?

I'd love to hear from people who have used them or uses them regularly.
They have proven to be effective against cyano and other bacteria-based algaes. Also helpful in killing or reducing things like ich. Amount of flow is important here. If memory serves, algae is a stronger flow, ich slower flow. Counter argument is that it also kills good bacteria as well so benefits are questionable.
 
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Paulie069

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Hey guys, so I know very little on UV Filters and was recommended to using one to help combat my cyano problem. I'm not too sure what they do other than it killing algae/bacteria that passes through it.

Are there pros and cons to them?

Will I have to feed more to keep nutrient up or anything like that?

I'd love to hear from people who have used them or uses them regularly.
When I very first set up my tank it turned this ugly yellow color, looked like someone was peeing in it for a week it was so bad I couldn’t even see my rock scape and didn’t even see any of my seahorses, had no idea if they were dead or alive 26 of em at the time, my buddy who had a ton of experience was trying to help me out. Tried bunch of things like big WC then we tried a diatom filter, that cleared it up a little bit but as soon as I turned it off within couple hours looked bad again, I was so worried that my ponies were dead or dying and I was gonna throw in the towel and start all over, but he asked me to try one more thing and suggested that I get a UV light sized to tank. It wasn’t to expensive only 80-90 dollars
Well it worked amazing and started clearing up in 2 hours, by dinner it was I’d saw 20-25% better already. It started looking even better when I went to bed,, next day I wake up and go check on it and it was
100% clear and ALL my ponies were alright (was so happy n shocked) and I have only turned it off once for 1hr so I could clean it and it’s been on 24-7 ever since and my tank is crystal clear n looking good
It’s now 8 months old and still looks good
At least I think it does

E023C432-23B3-4DCC-8261-C7E152BE6DB6.jpeg
 
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Reefer37

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Cons you say? Come again?
I had read about them killing beneficial bacteria as well. I guess my question becomes at what point is it safe to add one to tank so that it is mature enough that it won't affect the actual bio-film.
 
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I have ran them on and off for years. I run them simply to make the water appear more clear and less yellow.
I never notice how un-clear it is until I hook up uv. But in 48 hours the tank always looks much better.
I have no idea what happens that makes it more clear, kinda like when I run carbon seems to polish the water. But I’m and idiot so take with grain of reef salt.
 

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I had read about them killing beneficial bacteria as well. I guess my question becomes at what point is it safe to add one to tank so that it is mature enough that it won't affect the actual bio-film.

I had a horrible bacterial bloom during my tank cycle, couldn't get the water to clear up no matter how many water changes I did. Added a UV and the tank was clear in a day or two. So I've been running one on mine since start up and everything has gone well for 5 years so far. Got to remember to change the bulb every year or it will lose it's effectiveness. Also make sure you get the right size pump for your UV unit. If the water is going through the UV light too fast it won't kill the bad stuff.
 

zachj7

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I think most people seem to agree most all of your beneficial bacteria tend to stay on surfaces, and not in the water column. The UV will do a good job of killing things in the water column, but won't do anything for things that stay on surfaces.
 

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I think most people seem to agree most all of your beneficial bacteria tend to stay on surfaces, and not in the water column. The UV will do a good job of killing things in the water column, but won't do anything for things that stay on surfaces.
You beat me to it :cool:
 
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Reefer37

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I think most people seem to agree most all of your beneficial bacteria tend to stay on surfaces, and not in the water column. The UV will do a good job of killing things in the water column, but won't do anything for things that stay on surfaces.
Awesome, this what I was needing to know!
 
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